Encoding cp-1252 as utf-8?

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既然无缘
既然无缘 2020-12-20 02:22

I am trying to write a Java app that will run on a linux server but that will process files generated on legacy Windows machines using cp-1252 as the character set. Is there

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  • 2020-12-20 03:22

    You can read and write text data in any encoding that you wish. Here's a quick code example:

      public static void main(String[] args) throws Exception
      {
        // List all supported encodings
        for (String cs : Charset.availableCharsets().keySet())
          System.out.println(cs);
    
        File file = new File("SomeWindowsFile.txt");
        StringBuilder builder = new StringBuilder();
    
        // Construct a reader for a specific encoding
        Reader reader = new InputStreamReader(new FileInputStream(file), "windows-1252");
        while (reader.ready())
        {
          builder.append(reader.read());
        }
        reader.close();
    
        String string = builder.toString();
    
        // Construct a writer for a specific encoding
        Writer writer = new OutputStreamWriter(new FileOutputStream(file), "UTF8");
        writer.write(string);
        writer.flush();
        writer.close();
      }
    

    If this still 'chokes' on read, see if you can verify that the the original encoding is what you think it is. In this case I've specified windows-1252, which is the java string for cp-1252.

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  • 2020-12-20 03:23

    If the file names as well as content is a problem, the easiest way to solve the problem is setting the locale on the Linux machine to something based on ISO-8859-1 rather than UTF-8. You can use locale -a to list available locales. For example if you have en_US.iso88591 you could use:

    export LANG=en_US.iso88591
    

    This way Java will use ISO-8859-1 for file names, which is probably good enough. To run the Java program you still have to set the file.encoding system property:

    java -Dfile.encoding=cp1252 -cp foo.jar:bar.jar blablabla
    

    If no ISO-8859-1 locale is available you can generate one with localedef. Installing it requires root access though. In fact, you could generate a locale that uses CP-1252, if it is available on your system. For example:

    sudo localedef -f CP1252 -i en_US en_US.cp1252
    export LANG=en_US.cp1252
    

    This way Java should use CP1252 by default for all I/O, including file names.

    Expanded further here: http://jonisalonen.com/2012/java-and-file-names-with-invalid-characters/

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